By A JOINT REPORT, The EastAfrican
In Summary
- Withheld financing has impacted the disbursement of Tsh290 billion ($163,413,000) to the national electoral commission to procure biometric voter registration kits, as well as prepare for a referendum on a new constitution, scheduled for April. Major energy and infrastructure projects have also been affected.
Stung by a decision by major donors to withhold
$500 million in aid until a corruption scandal is fully investigated and
implicated officials punished, the Tanzanian government now says it
will not plan for any support in the next budget.
Servacius Likwelile, the Permanent Secretary in
the Finance Ministry, said donors had stayed away from a scheduled
budget review meeting in November, and that there were no indications of
how much money, if any, they would give to reduce the budget deficit
for the 2015/16 financial year that begins in July.
“The government has decided that, going forward,
we will not continue to depend on donors, and we have come up with other
measures to offset this,” Dr Likwelile said.
The new budget guidelines seen by The EastAfrican
acknowledge the difficulties the government has faced in accessing
promised aid in the first two quarters of the 2014/15 financial year.
“The challenge that the government faced in
accessing general budget support (GBS) funds in the first two quarters
of the 2014/15 budget has cast a shadow on the realism of projecting GBS
funds into the budget,” the guidelines note. “Therefore, GBS funds will
be recognised once the disbursements are made.”
Donors withheld $500 million (5 per cent of their
commitment in GBS) in budget support, to encourage the government to
investigate the irregular removal of $125 million from the Tegeta escrow
account at the Tanzanian central bank in 2013.
The withheld financing has impacted the
disbursement of Tsh290 billion ($163,413,000) to the national electoral
commission to procure biometric voter registration kits, as well as
prepare for a referendum on a new constitution, scheduled for April.
Major energy and infrastructure projects have also been affected.
The EastAfrican understands that donors
promised about $3 billion for the 2014/15 financial year (35 per cent of
the country’s budget), most of which was not affected by the aid cuts
and continues to go to the earmarked projects.
Nevertheless, the guidelines say the government
intends to borrow Tsh4.2 trillion ($2.36 billion) from both domestic and
external sources, of which domestic borrowing for rollover of matured
government securities is Tsh1.4 trillion ($789 million) in the next
financial year.
Recurrent expenditure is estimated at Tsh15
trillion ($8.45 billion) including Tsh6 trillion ($3.38 billion) for
wages and salaries for civil servants, while development expenditure is
estimated at Tsh4.8 trillion ($2.7 billion). Of this, locally financed
development expenditure is Tsh3.3 trillion ($1.86 billion), and foreign
financed development expenditure is estimated at Tsh1.5 trillion ($845
million).
The government says it will try to close the financing deficit by improving tax collection and implementing a new VAT law.
Haji Semboja, a senior economist and lecturer at
the University of Dar es Salaam, said Tanzania was not in a position to
give up on budget support and the decision may impact the country’s
credit rating.
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